How To Make An Unlikable Protagonist Work For Your Story - A bully brays, surrounded by skulls.
Writing
Rebecca Langley

How To Make An Unlikable Protagonist Work For Your Story

Literature and TV are chock-full of compelling but detestable protagonists. Even when these characters don’t undergo a dramatic transformation – à la Ebenezer Scrooge – they captivate an audience and are often wildly popular. Let’s explore what makes unlikable protagonists work. There’s a little bit of human psychology behind it and plenty of literary mechanism.

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5 Ways Maya Angelou Can Improve Your Writing - Maya Angelou speaks, a caged bird in her speech bubble.
Writing
Fred Johnson

5 Ways Maya Angelou Can Help You Improve Your Writing

There are few serious poets, activists, and biographers who haven’t taken inspiration from the indomitable Maya Angelou. A woman of immense passion and experience, the late Angelou (author of I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, six other autobiographies, and several books of poetry) could have given advice on anything from journalism to dancing to

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How To Write An Acknowledgment Your Readers Will Love - A reader opens a book and hearts spill out.
Writing
Paige Duke

How To Write An Acknowledgment Your Readers Will Love

I really mostly just want to thank my wife… she was the one who had to put up with me. That she did so with love and patience and encouragement instead of strangling me, throwing my remains into a wood chipper, and then pretending she had never been married to me at all is a

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How (And Why) You Should Write An Ensemble Cast - Part 2 - An orchestra play together.
Writing
Robert Wood

How (And Why) You Should Write An Ensemble Cast – Part 2

In part 1 of this article, I talked about what an ensemble cast involves and the times that writing one might be the best fit for your story. If that convinced you to embrace the ensemble (or if that’s what you wanted to do anyway), welcome to part 2, in which I’ll be talking about

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